2012 deadliest year in Karachi for two decades
Pakistan’s financial hub Karachi saw its deadliest year in two decades last year, with around 2,000 people killed in violence linked to ethnic and political tensions.

Pakistan’s financial hub Karachi saw its deadliest year in two decades last year, with around 2,000 people killed in violence linked to ethnic and political tensions, raising fears for elections due this year.
Karachi, a business centre with a population of 18 million, is the beating heart of the nuclear-armed country of 180 million.
It accounts for 20 per cent of GDP, 57 per cent of tax revenue and elects 33 lawmakers to the federal parliament.
Yet enormous waves of migration have tightened resources and exacerbated a fight for identity and control that has only become deadlier in the five years since the main ruling Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) took office in Islamabad.
Trapped in the middle are ordinary people who one day leave home, never to return alive – victims of faceless gangs condemned by political parties yet linked to ethnic and political factions, and who escape with impunity.
“My son went to pay his respects at his father’s grave, but he never came back. We found his mutilated body in a bag,” says Shahida, sobbing uncontrollably in her damp home, lit only by a naked bulb hanging from a cracked ceiling.